The aim of this site is to help you gain the skills to build your own personal learning network (PLN)!
pln3.jpg
Personal Learning Networks (PLNs) are all about using web tools such as blogs, wiki, twitter, facebook to create connects with others which extend our learning, increases our reflection while enabling us to learn together as part of a global community. PLNs increase our opportunities to ask questions and receive help compared to our normal daily face-to-face interactions.
Best of a PLN is it's personal! You make all the choices:
What tools you use!
Who you connect with!
How you want to learn!
When you want to learn!
It's really important that you use these tools for your personal learning first before using them with your students so you gain greater understanding of how to use them effectively and to realize their importance for empowering personal learning!
warninglabel1.jpg
The idea of this site is to provide you with central location for resources and "how to" guides so that you can start building your own PLN. Most of the resources on this sites have been compiled from information from my other web sites. Remember as you use this information. Each of us has our own preference of what online tools works best for us.
The tips and advice provided on this site is for building your PLN is based on the responses of over 160 people to myonline survey.
navigation.jpg
The questions asked in the survey were:
What's the most important thing you've learned from your PLN?
Rank tools in terms of importance in your PLN
What 5 tools would you recommend as a starting point to building a PLN?
What are your 5 tips for new people to get them started building their own PLN?
The information on setting up your PLN is broken into two sections:
The 5 Tops Tools for Building Your PLN - these sections background information, helpful resources and tips
PLN Workshop - this section is designed specifically for participants at hands-on workshops
If you are new to these tools you will probably want to refer to information in both sections.
Get started by working through the list of 5 top tools, in any order, to start
March 24, 2009 by darcymoore
Last year I started asking around, on Twitter, for the origin of the acronyms that I was reading so much about. ‘Personal Learning Networks’ (PLNs) and ‘Personal Learning Environments’ (PLEs) were so often used by the educators that I was following that it was surprising no-one really could source them.
Recently, I have had more luck. Both David Warlick and George Siemens were generous in their explanations and insights. Stephen Downes’ comments and posts helped put it all together and one just followed the breadcrumbs.
Warlick’s explanation of the origin of PLNs and Downe’s comment that Warlick has been promoting the term in his articles and that: “The term ‘Personal Learning Network’ is directly derived from ‘Personal Learning Environment’, which as history shows was first used at the The Personal Learning Environments Session at a JISC/CETIS Conference in 2004.”
completes the picture (although I do not understand the politics of this completely) and places these terms in context.
This post is really about framing these concepts for potential use in a NSW DET context. I believe that we should use PLN as a term for teachers/staff and PLE in relation to students’ learning needs. I wrote to a ’system leader’ outlining this last year: If we facilitated a model that emphasised each professional teacher developing their understanding and skills on how to create a Personal Learning Network (PLN) using Web 2.0 tools along with traditional notions of professional development (professional associations, regional networks, school-based TPL), it is possible that a quantum leap forward in how students were taught and learn, may take place
If we developed a model that emphasised each student having a Personal Learning Environment (PLE) and facilitated staff understanding of how this could be undertaken, learning outcomes would not only be enhanced but potentially, teachers and students could adapt more readily to technological change due to the development of this most flexible of models.
Considering the evolution of the acronyms, surely we could use them to communicate the changed teaching and learning landscape. How far do we educators (and our systems) have to go to get up to speed with the tools, and more importantly the pedagogy, that is needed for ‘our times’ and could this framing assist?
What are your thoughts on developing the PLE concept for students and that of a PLN for educators?
Finally, I am looking forward to Stephen Downes’ seminar next Tuesday in Sydney
http://socialelearning.flexiblelearning.net.au/social_elearning/index.htm This link above takes you to the flexible learning network site for understanding social learning. PERSONAL LEARNING NETWORK what is all the talk about! and Below check out what is social BOOK MARKING This information has been provided by Sue Waters .. her blog is http://suewaters.wikispaces.com/
The aim of this site is to help you gain the skills to build your own personal learning network (PLN)!
Best of a PLN is it's personal! You make all the choices:
It's really important that you use these tools for your personal learning first before using them with your students so you gain greater understanding of how to use them effectively and to realize their importance for empowering personal learning!
The idea of this site is to provide you with central location for resources and "how to" guides so that you can start building your own PLN. Most of the resources on this sites have been compiled from information from my other web sites. Remember as you use this information. Each of us has our own preference of what online tools works best for us.
The tips and advice provided on this site is for building your PLN is based on the responses of over 160 people to myonline survey.
The questions asked in the survey were:
The information on setting up your PLN is broken into two sections:
If you are new to these tools you will probably want to refer to information in both sections.
Get started by working through the list of 5 top tools, in any order, to start
NOTE: The order of the tools in the list doesn't represent priority -- the idea is youwork through them in any order!
As you work through the tools remember these( tips of advice from my PLN:
Here are the links to my other sites:
Sighted in Darcy Moore's Blog
http://darcymoore.wordpress.com/2009/03/24/plns-and-ples/
PLNs and PLEs
March 24, 2009 by darcymooreLast year I started asking around, on Twitter, for the origin of the acronyms that I was reading so much about. ‘Personal Learning Networks’ (PLNs) and ‘Personal Learning Environments’ (PLEs) were so often used by the educators that I was following that it was surprising no-one really could source them.
Recently, I have had more luck. Both David Warlick and George Siemens were generous in their explanations and insights. Stephen Downes’ comments and posts helped put it all together and one just followed the breadcrumbs.
Warlick’s explanation of the origin of PLNs and Downe’s comment that Warlick has been promoting the term in his articles and that:
“The term ‘Personal Learning Network’ is directly derived from ‘Personal Learning Environment’, which as history shows was first used at the The Personal Learning Environments Session at a JISC/CETIS Conference in 2004.”
completes the picture (although I do not understand the politics of this completely) and places these terms in context.
This post is really about framing these concepts for potential use in a NSW DET context. I believe that we should use PLN as a term for teachers/staff and PLE in relation to students’ learning needs. I wrote to a ’system leader’ outlining this last year:
If we facilitated a model that emphasised each professional teacher developing their understanding and skills on how to create a Personal Learning Network (PLN) using Web 2.0 tools along with traditional notions of professional development (professional associations, regional networks, school-based TPL), it is possible that a quantum leap forward in how students were taught and learn, may take place
If we developed a model that emphasised each student having a Personal Learning Environment (PLE) and facilitated staff understanding of how this could be undertaken, learning outcomes would not only be enhanced but potentially, teachers and students could adapt more readily to technological change due to the development of this most flexible of models.
Considering the evolution of the acronyms, surely we could use them to communicate the changed teaching and learning landscape. How far do we educators (and our systems) have to go to get up to speed with the tools, and more importantly the pedagogy, that is needed for ‘our times’ and could this framing assist?
What are your thoughts on developing the PLE concept for students and that of a PLN for educators?
Finally, I am looking forward to Stephen Downes’ seminar next Tuesday in Sydney
*